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Nap-induced modulations of tinnitus -a cross-sectional database analysis

Authors :
Guillard, Robin
Schecklmann, Martin
Simoes, Jorge
Langguth, Berthold
Londero, Alain
Congedo, Marco
Michiels, Sarah
Vesala, Markku
Goedhart, Hazel
Wetter, Thomas
Weber, Franziska C
Source :
Scientific Reports, 2024, 14 (1), pp.20111
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The influence of naps on tinnitus was systematically assessed by exploring the frequency, clinical and demographic characteristics of this phenomenon. 9,724 data from two different tinnitus databases (Tinnitus Hub: $n = 6115$; Tinnitus Research Initiative (TRI): $n = 3627$) were included. After separate analysis of the databases, these results were then compared with each other. In the Tinnitus Hub survey database, a total of 31.1% reported an influence on tinnitus by taking a nap (26.9% in the TRI database), with much more frequent worsening after a nap than improvement (23.0% a little or a lot worse; TRI: 17.7% worse; 8.1% a little or a lot better; TRI: 9.2% better). The influence of napping on tinnitus was associated in both databases with other clinical features, such as the dependence of tinnitus on night quality, stress and somatosensory maneuvers. The present study confirms the clinical observation that more tinnitus sufferers report worsening after a nap than tinnitus sufferers reporting an improvement. It was consistently shown that tinnitus sufferers reporting nap-induced modulation of tinnitus also report more frequently an influence of night sleep on their tinnitus. Further clinical and polysomnographic research is warranted to better understand the interaction between sleep and tinnitus.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Scientific Reports, 2024, 14 (1), pp.20111
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2412.09973
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-70871-z